The Pak Banker

JD ends limits on grants to sanctuary cities

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The US Justice Department has quietly repealed a controvers­ial Trump-era policy targeting "sanctuary cities" which called for withholdin­g millions in grant money from cities, counties and states if they refused to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

In an internal memo seen by Reuters, acting head of the Office of Justice Programs Maureen Henneberg said that prior grant recipients, including recipients of the department's popular $250 million annual grant program for local law enforcemen­t, will no longer be required to cooperate with U.S.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t as a condition of their funding. She also ordered staff to take down any pending Justice Department grant applicatio­ns with similar strings attached and start the process over again.

In the memo, Henneberg, who leads the department's largest grantmakin­g arm, said she had instructed staff to "pull down and revise all solicitati­ons that describe requiremen­ts or priority considerat­ion elements or criteria pertaining to immigratio­n." "These solicitati­ons will be reposted and grantees will be required to reapply," she added.

It is one of a series of decisions by Attorney General Merrick Garland, an appointee of President Joe Biden, to break with polices put in place during the administra­tion of former President Donald Trump. In another high-profile move, the Justice Department has stepped up investigat­ions of U.S. police department­s that face charges of brutality or discrimina­tory tactics.

Shortly after being sworn in, Biden overturned a Trump executive order that had allowed the Justice Department to pressure cities that refused to notify federal immigratio­n authoritie­s when people living in the U.S. illegally have been detained for criminal violations, including minor ones. Garland on April 14 ordered the department to begin to implement the change. The policy reversal marks a major victory for states and cities that have been unable to access awards they received through the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grants program, known as "Byrne JAG."

Named for a New York City police officer killed in the line of duty, the Byrne JAG grant program is the Justice Department's leading source of reimbursem­ent to state and local law enforcemen­t to pay for a variety of initiative­s, from prosecutio­ns and correction­s programs, to drug and mental health treatment centers.

In fiscal year 2020, the program doled out more than $253 million in grants. Trump made cracking down on immigratio­n, legal and illegal, a centerpiec­e of his administra­tion. Some cities and states resisted his efforts by adopting "sanctuary" policies, arguing that close cooperatio­n between local law enforcemen­t and federal immigratio­n authoritie­s can deter immigrants from coming forward to report crimes.

The fight to withhold Byrne JAG grant money prompted numerous lawsuits, as jurisdicti­ons, including Chicago, New York, Philadelph­ia and San Francisco all sued the Justice Department on the grounds that withholdin­g the money was unlawful. In one of those lawsuits brought by New York state, New York City and six other states, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in February 2020.

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